The document features input from leaders at HIMSS and its affiliated innovation arms, Healthbox, Health 2.0, and PCHAlliance. The forecast aims to provide perspectives that will lead to better clinical and financial outcomes.

“Consumer pressure is driving a disruptive technology-enabled shift in healthcare today," says Hal Wolf, HIMSS President and CEO in the report. "Digital health technologies are beginning to deliver on their promise to help providers understand individual consumer preferences and provide personalized care that effectively coordinates care throughout the broader health ecosystem. By fully realizing the potential of information and technology, we can create an ever-increasingly informed and empowered global community of innovators, care providers, and patients.”

"Digital health tools have been riding the peak of the hype cycle for several years now," according to the forecast, "but 2019 will be the year that digital health will need to answer for the way technology will increase access to care and narrow gaps in care and coverage."

Here are eight takeaways from the report related to digital innovation:

1. Government Walls Come Tumbling Down

2. Policy Changes Will Enhance Speed to Market

The authors also predict a more aggressive stance by policymakers to speed to market tools that increase patient access, improve healthcare efficiencies, decrease provider burden, and create new pathways for care delivery that don’t require hospital stays.

Population health will get a boost from broader adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning to improve identification of at-risk individuals as well as delivery of personalized (precision) treatments.

4. Digital Therapeutics Gain Headway

It's no surprise that the report indicates that digital therapeutics usage is expected to rise as an adjunct to treatment to enhance medication adherence, for example, and "as an alternative to traditional treatments, such as diabetes prevention programs and other models related to preventing or mitigating the impact of chronic conditions."

5. Pain Treatment Goes Virtual

Virtual reality/augmented reality (VR/AR) will become more mainstream as a routine treatment for pain control after surgery and as an adjunct for chronic pain control.

6. Hear This! Solutions for Provider Relief will Proliferate

Innovative solutions to ease the burden on clinicians include broader use of voice recognition and intelligent assistants.

7. Devices Employed to Manage Chronic Diseases

Chronic disease detection and management will benefit from wearables and implantable health devices that also will monitor the effectiveness of treatment.

8. Blockchain Breaks Free

"Finally, after much speculation and hype, 2019 will be the year that blockchain’s potential as an interoperability aid comes into sharper focus," says the report. The authors predicts that distributed ledger technology (DLT) will be "leveraged as a part of the broader interoperability ‘toolbox’ to remove the redundancy and friction points that currently exist within the system (i.e. claims adjudication, benefit fulfillment, provider credentialing, etc.). DLT is not a ‘magic bullet;’ it’s essentially middleware that was designed to be extremely transparent, but will be utilized to start conversations and explore new business opportunities with stakeholders who have not been able to ‘talk’ to each other due to misaligned incentives and technological infrastructure."